A conference at Matica hrvatska, Zagreb, Croatia.
Image: Self-Portrait, Staring. Rembrandt, 1630. Wikimedia Commons.
Date: Thursday 18 and Friday 19 October 2018
Venue: Matica hrvatska, Velika dvorana, Ulica Matice hrvatske 2, 10000 Zagreb, Croatia
Enquiries: Email mirko.sardelic@ctie.hr or ivana@ifzg.hr or martino@ifzg.hr
Link to Conference Website/Program
Over the past four decades, the topic of emotions has increasingly attracted attention across a vast number of disciplines. It has become customary to speak of an ‘emotional turn’ in anthropology as well as in social science and cultural studies, in history as well as in cognitive science. This interest has contributed to generate new questions, to address old problems from different perspectives, to connect different fields of research or to create new ones, to devise new theories and scientific models, and to the establishment of interdisciplinary research centres, journals and research groups. Fields as diverse as affective neuroscience, history of emotions, sociology of emotions, archaeology of emotions, and emotional robotics – to name but a few – have gradually emerged.
On the other hand, both in the sciences and the humanities, original insights and genuine breakthroughs coexist with naïve enthusiasms, ideological dismissals, precipitous conversions to supposedly revolutionary theories or methods, sweeping generalisations and reckless mutual borrowings between different research traditions. The scenario is, as always, complex, diversified, often quite confused and therefore worthy of being examined.
By bringing together scholars and experts of different backgrounds – philosophers, historians, psychologists, linguists, neuroscientists, biologists, anthropologists – this symposium will examine some of the major trends in current research on the emotions and, at the same time, explore the ways in which ideas, images, theories and experiences of ‘the emotions’ have changed, persisted, disappeared or resurfaced in the course of history. The aim is not to settle ongoing debates or ‘solve’ philosophical dilemmas, but rather to formulate problems with more clarity, to give voice to different positions, to raise questions and to understand where our scientific knowledge of emotions has advanced and where it has not. At the same time, by adding historical perspective, the aim is also to dispel the obviousness of our current assumptions, to complicate the picture, to question simplified historical reconstructions, to identify the tangled roots of our present views and to investigate the reasons behind the interest (and obsession) with the emotions in both current scholarship and in our societies in general. This will also be an opportunity to distinguish the meanings, the uses and the philosophical or ideological connotations associated with terms such as ‘emotion’, ‘affect’, ‘feeling’, or ’mood’ in different fields of research and areas of culture (and across languages), to trace their history from a long durée perspective, and to explore both diverging opinions and common ideas, metaphors, paradigms and worldviews circulating across different disciplines.
Conference Committee:
- Dr Martino Rossi Monti, Institute of Philosophy (Zagreb)
- Dr Mirko Sardelic, Centre for the Study of Emotions in Cross-Cultural Exchange (Zagreb) and ARC Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions at The University of Western Australia
- Dr Ivana Skuhala Karasman, Institute of Philosophy (Zagreb)
The symposium is presented by the Institute of Philosophy (Zagreb), the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts, Matica hrvatska and the Centre for the Study of Emotions in Cross-Cultural Exchange (Zagreb), with support from the Croatian Ministry of Science and Education, and the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for the History of Emotions.